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Dec 2, 2018
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talks between the presidents of the united states and china about their trade dispute have ended after two and a half hours without comment. the two men held a working dinner after the 620 summit in buenos aires. that finished with a call to reform the world trade organisation. mexico's new president, andres manuel lopez obrador, has been sworn in. he pledged to end what he called failed neoliberal policies that have led to an increase in poverty and mass migration. he also announced the creation of a huge free trade zone next to the border with the united states. now on bbc news, as part of our 100 women series, we travel to el salvador. the country is the worst in the world for the killing of women and girls on account of their gender. we explore why femicide is such a problem there, and what is being done about it. this programme contains some language and images you may find disturbing. el salvador is considered one of the world's most violent countries. it has one of the highest homicide rates outside of a war zone. after decades of civil war in the ‘80s and ‘90s, el salvador
talks between the presidents of the united states and china about their trade dispute have ended after two and a half hours without comment. the two men held a working dinner after the 620 summit in buenos aires. that finished with a call to reform the world trade organisation. mexico's new president, andres manuel lopez obrador, has been sworn in. he pledged to end what he called failed neoliberal policies that have led to an increase in poverty and mass migration. he also announced the...
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Dec 28, 2018
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when i came to the united states 30 something years ago — 31 years ago — i told the man who would later become my husband, willie, i said, this is a fascinating country, willie, but it is also a very potentially fascist country. and he said, what are you talking about? this is the cradle of democracy. and i said, yeah but look at the south, look at the middle of the country, look at segregation, the mental segregation of people because, even if the country got over slavery and got over segregation, it is still rooted in the culture and the hearts of so many people. so he denied it completely then. now he admits that i was right from the very beginning. and i think that the white population that supports trump feels very threatened by anything that defies or threatens their privileges or their superiority or the fact that they have been in control always. that is shifting also, and it is very scary. but donald trump would says that he is lowering taxes and increasing employment, and that leads to a better... yeas, but lowering taxes for the rich. it is true that there is more employment
when i came to the united states 30 something years ago — 31 years ago — i told the man who would later become my husband, willie, i said, this is a fascinating country, willie, but it is also a very potentially fascist country. and he said, what are you talking about? this is the cradle of democracy. and i said, yeah but look at the south, look at the middle of the country, look at segregation, the mental segregation of people because, even if the country got over slavery and got over...
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Dec 9, 2018
12/18
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meng wanzhou was arrested in vancouver a week ago and faces extradition to the united states, accused of breaking american sanctions on iran. thousands of people have protested in australia's major cities against a controversial coal mine to be built in queensland in the new year. last week, the indian mining giant adani announced it would press ahead with plans to build a downsized version of the mine. environmentalists say it will further damage the iconic great barrier reef and contribute to australia's rising greenhouse gas emissions. lucy mcnally reports. coal, don't dig it! this was the call from australia's young generation to its current leaders. get with the times. they're angry at the government for backing an adani coal mine to be built in central queensland next year. we are taking the stand that our leaders are far too afraid to take themselves. we are the people who have been fighting, and we'll keep fighting for a brighterfuture, not just for ourselves, but for our children, and our children's children. after years of environmental and legal disputes, the queensland lab
meng wanzhou was arrested in vancouver a week ago and faces extradition to the united states, accused of breaking american sanctions on iran. thousands of people have protested in australia's major cities against a controversial coal mine to be built in queensland in the new year. last week, the indian mining giant adani announced it would press ahead with plans to build a downsized version of the mine. environmentalists say it will further damage the iconic great barrier reef and contribute to...
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Dec 27, 2018
12/18
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donor, the united states, has cut off some of its funding? you keep going at it, it starts right from when you're at home. what you do at home to bring an end to conflict, we were part of bringing an end to the conflict where we had militants blowing up our pipelines in the niger delta. we never thought that that can happen but we continued to engage and we got to the point where they put down their guns and they handed them over and they reintegrated, so when things go very wrong, it is now that you really need to draw on the networks and on the colleagues and on the people that you have and continue engaging. it is really difficult to engage with someone who totally defies the norms and standards of the core values that we hold. you mean president trump? i don't mean necessarily president trump, but i think that there are many people that it is very difficult to deal with. now we are used to that in africa, aren't we? for decades we have been dealing with leaders that should have been doing better for their people, but we engaged with them
donor, the united states, has cut off some of its funding? you keep going at it, it starts right from when you're at home. what you do at home to bring an end to conflict, we were part of bringing an end to the conflict where we had militants blowing up our pipelines in the niger delta. we never thought that that can happen but we continued to engage and we got to the point where they put down their guns and they handed them over and they reintegrated, so when things go very wrong, it is now...
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Dec 3, 2018
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states in the early 21st. a dominant world power that believed it was a force for good in the world. the correspondence of british officials dealing with the challenges of governance in the north american colonies has a familiar ring, as they agonize about the best way to balance the exercise of power with the right liberties and interests of in. additionples to the very rich source material housed in the mhs and other boston repositories, this gave me the opportunity to work in depth in the papers of thomas gage, the commander in chief of british forces in north america in the 1760's and 1770's. newspapers, which reside in the clements library in the university of michigan, have one of the most astonishing troves of research materials from the 18th century in the world. they pick up 70 linear feet of shelf space. it is bound into 169 volumes with an additional 40 boxes of financial records. they give the researcher a glimpse of how difficult the task gage was assigned. this is how i described his job in the b
states in the early 21st. a dominant world power that believed it was a force for good in the world. the correspondence of british officials dealing with the challenges of governance in the north american colonies has a familiar ring, as they agonize about the best way to balance the exercise of power with the right liberties and interests of in. additionples to the very rich source material housed in the mhs and other boston repositories, this gave me the opportunity to work in depth in the...
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Dec 21, 2018
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which was so similar in the late 18th century to the united states in the early 21st. a dominant world power believed it was a force for good in the world. the correspondence of british officials dealing with the challenge of governance in north american colonies as they agonized about the best way to balance the exercise of power with the right liberties and interests of distant peoples. in addition to the rich source material housed in the mhs and other boston repositories, the project gave me an opportunity to work in depth in the papers of thomas gage, the commander in chief of british forces in north america during the 1760s and 1770s. the papers which reside in the clements library in the university of michigan comprise one of the most astonishing tropes of 18th-century research material than anywhere in the world. they pick up they take up 70 linear shelf spaces in the library. 169 volumes with an additional volume of financial record which gives researchers a glimpse on how difficult a task gage was assigned in the 1760s and 1770s how he describes the job in th
which was so similar in the late 18th century to the united states in the early 21st. a dominant world power believed it was a force for good in the world. the correspondence of british officials dealing with the challenge of governance in north american colonies as they agonized about the best way to balance the exercise of power with the right liberties and interests of distant peoples. in addition to the rich source material housed in the mhs and other boston repositories, the project gave...
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Dec 19, 2018
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he added japan, agreed to and immigration of japanese laborers to the united states. what that meant was that congress did the thing that is so often does, it kicked the can down the road and said, let's have a commission to study the problem, rather than make any conclusions. that is how the commission came about. people were concerned about southern eastern europe -- immigration in the peak years? absolutely. 1907 was a record year of arrivals. it was a diplomatic crisis with japan that prompted the actual creation of the commission, not any independent move to do that on its own. just to put that into context, let's talk about the long-term legacy of the commission. i would like you to understand, picture that the south had a disproportionately large representation in congress and the senate for reasons that i don't need to explain, i hope, because we all know about how the senate is elected, and how many states get how many, so on and so forth. they did not really like many southern legislators. they did not like the republican, roosevelt's aggregation of federal
he added japan, agreed to and immigration of japanese laborers to the united states. what that meant was that congress did the thing that is so often does, it kicked the can down the road and said, let's have a commission to study the problem, rather than make any conclusions. that is how the commission came about. people were concerned about southern eastern europe -- immigration in the peak years? absolutely. 1907 was a record year of arrivals. it was a diplomatic crisis with japan that...
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Dec 31, 2018
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we have to make an effort in the united states. we have to make an effort to was an explosion acrossnd your the country. there were riots, uprising, rebellions. washington, d.c., 14th street were on fire. the police were standing down so the black panther party wanted to respond. believe peoplet should go out and riot so they took it upon themselves, a group of panthers took it on themselves to engage in actions in response to king's assassination and the groups were about eight panthers in a car who were going to essentially attack police and respond. but does what ended up happening , a a group got scattered small contingent ended up in a and wereoakland shooting back and forth with the oakland police. and -- were in the same house and the house began to catch on fire. said we don't want to burn to death, so bobby hutton came out and attempt to surrender and was i was on my way to figure out how to get to cuba, you have to go to a very roundabout way, take a flight in algeria to cuba. i got there and i got a message, "wait, eldri
we have to make an effort in the united states. we have to make an effort to was an explosion acrossnd your the country. there were riots, uprising, rebellions. washington, d.c., 14th street were on fire. the police were standing down so the black panther party wanted to respond. believe peoplet should go out and riot so they took it upon themselves, a group of panthers took it on themselves to engage in actions in response to king's assassination and the groups were about eight panthers in a...
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Dec 31, 2018
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states and other countries out of the united states, triggered in large part by the dislocations of the war in vietnam but also the sense of hope. the sense that the world was going to change. that king and people like king were articulating a different vision for america, and there were masses and masses of people and demonstrations and belief that america could be changed. i remember being with radical revolutionary activists who were mostly 25 or younger, and younger down to teenagers, who really could sense that this is a moment, we have the chance, we were going to change the country. we talked about we were going to change the world. there was a lot of optimism. america was a wealthy place. we had a lot of resources. and the vietnam war dislocated the whole economy. the whole country. and challenged and made it possible for people to think about revolutionary transformation, whether it's peaceful or violent in this country. >> dr. joseph, did you want to weigh in? >> oh, certainly. '68 really is a global year of political revolution, so when we think of domestically of '68, on
states and other countries out of the united states, triggered in large part by the dislocations of the war in vietnam but also the sense of hope. the sense that the world was going to change. that king and people like king were articulating a different vision for america, and there were masses and masses of people and demonstrations and belief that america could be changed. i remember being with radical revolutionary activists who were mostly 25 or younger, and younger down to teenagers, who...
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Dec 31, 2018
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if i were president of the united states, i would take whatever was necessary to prevent what happened in this city if we had to order the knocking in the head of many people. when you do that, you're going satisfy the overwhelming majority of people are all races in this country, the government is cow today had a every anarchist group in the united states and as a consequence, we don't have any safety in the streets of our large from one campaign event to another. >> just to restate this question, why do you want to do this? it's such a man-willing thing, and you've already put in time, you've already served your country. >> well, that's a question that, believe me, has occurred to me too, and it occurs to my family. i suppose that your wife and your children feel even more deeply about their father and husband being involved in a great battle than he himself does, because the man who's in the battle, he can fight back, can answer, whereas those on the sidelines have to suffer in silence. but on the other hand, the reason that i think perhaps motivates me more than anything i e is ver
if i were president of the united states, i would take whatever was necessary to prevent what happened in this city if we had to order the knocking in the head of many people. when you do that, you're going satisfy the overwhelming majority of people are all races in this country, the government is cow today had a every anarchist group in the united states and as a consequence, we don't have any safety in the streets of our large from one campaign event to another. >> just to restate this...
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Dec 31, 2018
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the government is cow towed to every anarchist of the united states. we don't have any safety in the streets of our cities right here in washington, d.c.. >> july 1968, and face the nation, courtesy of cbs, robert marry. >> wallace got 13.5% of the vote in 1968. that's a very significant margin. he held the winner, richard nixon down to 43%. making him a minority president. he was a significant figure, and he was a significant figure because of the turmoil and ferment going on in american politics, we had a realignment, not just in terms of people in the electorate, but in terms of the issues that we're going to be driving politics. >> we go to katherine from mobile, alabama. good morning. >> good morning. >> yes, gentlemen, i lived 1968 until now, i'm older than at least one of you and probably both of you, i would like to say that from 1968 until what i see now, it is really horrified me, and in '68 what y'all are not talking about is how your party began to break up civics by using so much dogma, and the dogma became the whole deal with the republic
the government is cow towed to every anarchist of the united states. we don't have any safety in the streets of our cities right here in washington, d.c.. >> july 1968, and face the nation, courtesy of cbs, robert marry. >> wallace got 13.5% of the vote in 1968. that's a very significant margin. he held the winner, richard nixon down to 43%. making him a minority president. he was a significant figure, and he was a significant figure because of the turmoil and ferment going on in...
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Dec 31, 2018
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. ♪ ♪ united president of the states. >> thank you. >> vice president humphrey became the last major democratic to enter the race. as heir to the support that had the president humphrey acquired a substantial number of delegate votes before convention. and ank you very much. controlled by powerful democrats party power ratic brokers. o, even though kennedy and hubert humphrey had not participated in the primaries who was hard to the ign against him so campaign against hubert humphrey would have to be with the insiders of tt because he refus cknowledge that it was going badly and shift course, refused o seek an alternative strategy and tried to seek a middle green and und between escalation withdrawal and ended up worse so i reject the architect november of 1967 to challenge a president in his own party. that announcement was made november 30 of 1967. president johnson flairly defeats eugene mccarthy in the 12 hampshire primary march and that is key, michael cohen. he didn't lose it. margin of cally his victory. mr. cohen: he won by four days robert f. can't enters the race. that you
. ♪ ♪ united president of the states. >> thank you. >> vice president humphrey became the last major democratic to enter the race. as heir to the support that had the president humphrey acquired a substantial number of delegate votes before convention. and ank you very much. controlled by powerful democrats party power ratic brokers. o, even though kennedy and hubert humphrey had not participated in the primaries who was hard to the ign against him so campaign against hubert...
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Dec 31, 2018
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states. and i urge all my friends to give him their help and their votes. both of us will be encouraging, like-minded delegates to the national convention. both of us want above all else an open democratic convention in chicago, free to choose a new course for our party and for our country. finally, my decision reflects no personal animosity or disrespect toward president johnson. he served president kennedy with the utmost loyalty and it was extremely kind to me and members of my family in the difficult months which followed the events of november of 1963. i've often commended his efforts in health and education and in many other areas. and i have the deepest sympathy for the burden that he carries today. but the issue is not personal. it is our profound differences over where we are heading. and what we want to accomplish. i do not lightly dismiss the dangers and the difficulties of challenging an incumbent president. but these are not ordinary times. and this is not an ordinary election. a
states. and i urge all my friends to give him their help and their votes. both of us will be encouraging, like-minded delegates to the national convention. both of us want above all else an open democratic convention in chicago, free to choose a new course for our party and for our country. finally, my decision reflects no personal animosity or disrespect toward president johnson. he served president kennedy with the utmost loyalty and it was extremely kind to me and members of my family in the...
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Dec 31, 2018
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we will nominate the next president of the united states. chairman of the democratic figures. >> i'm a candidate -- there will be a candidate nominated for president tonight, vice president tomorrow night. host: marvin kalb with his signature red tie. photographer
we will nominate the next president of the united states. chairman of the democratic figures. >> i'm a candidate -- there will be a candidate nominated for president tonight, vice president tomorrow night. host: marvin kalb with his signature red tie. photographer
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Dec 31, 2018
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the middle east militarily was the worst blunder politically in the united states history. host: when did president johnson begins to think he would not serve another full-term? guest: i think it was when he realized the u.s. military forces won that battle. i will use the crudity that is easily defined among his comments but he said, if we had pulled back in vietnam, if we halt the bombing -- and remember that speech he gave, withdrawing from the race at the end of march was also to announce a halt to the bombing of the north -- but later on he had to restart it in the summer and said, i pulled back in vietnam, ho chi minh drove a truck up my ass. he could not find the answer because there wasn't one. between that and what he has seen on campuses and the students circling the white house, chanting every day and night, hey, hey, lbj, how many kids did you kill today? the answer was 1000 americans die in a week in vietnam, so i think the combination of that, i think he said it genuinely in that speech, i do not want to be taking time out on the political stump when i have ot
the middle east militarily was the worst blunder politically in the united states history. host: when did president johnson begins to think he would not serve another full-term? guest: i think it was when he realized the u.s. military forces won that battle. i will use the crudity that is easily defined among his comments but he said, if we had pulled back in vietnam, if we halt the bombing -- and remember that speech he gave, withdrawing from the race at the end of march was also to announce a...
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Dec 31, 2018
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that is yet another open wound for the united states to have to deal with. how did these people organize. i watched a documentary and without social media, the way to get to the media, in those days, media is supposed to be between the media and the people. now, we are. we are the media and the people of the media. it's what pat was saying about how to reach the media in the nixon campaign. how to do good advance work to get people out if you're having a rally or a demonstration. it was word of mouth, it was telephones, it was telegrams. >> i wrote this speak with nixon, the cambodian invasion speech. and it was very dramatic, because i think it was, what, april 1, i think it was 1970 and what happened was, they did have riots out at camp, that's why the national guard was called in by governor rhodes. he made a rough speech on sunday and monday. the students were up there and approaching these guardsmen, who foolishly had their live ammunition and rifles. four died, i think five or more wounded. i was home and i wasn't feeling and a fellow at work for me ca
that is yet another open wound for the united states to have to deal with. how did these people organize. i watched a documentary and without social media, the way to get to the media, in those days, media is supposed to be between the media and the people. now, we are. we are the media and the people of the media. it's what pat was saying about how to reach the media in the nixon campaign. how to do good advance work to get people out if you're having a rally or a demonstration. it was word of...
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Dec 31, 2018
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it was certainly beneficial for the united states. that's why i regret that over the last year or so there have been attacks on that system, but still the system of globalization shouldn't be described as international socialism. quite the opposite. it's the spread of capitalist institutions to much of the world. china into integrating itself into the economic system discarded some elements of its socialist economy. it still is a communist dictatorship but it has increasingly taken on elements of capitalism. so it's the opposite, i think, of what you were describing. >> elizabeth cobbs? >> i would respectfully disagree with that too, although i absolutely empathize with this worry, this concern that for decades upon decades, your whole life american soldiers having -- have been dying in various places. the interesting thing about that is that number has declined, so as bad as it is, that 24-hour news cycle which keeps reminding us of the terrible things that are happening tends to overlook that longer-term trend, and that trend has be
it was certainly beneficial for the united states. that's why i regret that over the last year or so there have been attacks on that system, but still the system of globalization shouldn't be described as international socialism. quite the opposite. it's the spread of capitalist institutions to much of the world. china into integrating itself into the economic system discarded some elements of its socialist economy. it still is a communist dictatorship but it has increasingly taken on elements...
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Dec 31, 2018
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what was happening in the united states steve: at that time? steve:-- united states at that time? steve: that is outlined in your book, "they marched in the sunlight." you had the antiwar demonstrations around the country, you had dow chemical. you had the horrific deaths of so many people in vietnam. tie the three together. david: the first protest that turned onto a violent confrontation, it was against dow chemical company recruiting on the campus at a time when some students were vehemently opposed to the war. there is an interesting connection that you can only make in retrospect which is as much as these students were protesting the war for a combination of idealism and self interest that i didn't want to fight in the war, they were also -- and didn't want to fight in the war, they were also opposing chemicals which had a profound negative effect on the soldiers and all the people in vietnam. napalm was destroying villages and also working as a weapon in that war, but agent orange had the most long-term, debilitating affect on the people in vietnam and on the soldiers many o
what was happening in the united states steve: at that time? steve:-- united states at that time? steve: that is outlined in your book, "they marched in the sunlight." you had the antiwar demonstrations around the country, you had dow chemical. you had the horrific deaths of so many people in vietnam. tie the three together. david: the first protest that turned onto a violent confrontation, it was against dow chemical company recruiting on the campus at a time when some students were...
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i think it was the most complicated war that the united states has ever had to fight. it's not necessarily a negative thing to say at this point, but maybe a stalemate given the strategic circumstances and the power of the anti-war movement here was an acceptable goal at a certain point, just like north korea versus south korea. just like east germany versus west germany. that's the way a lot of people, including myself, looked at what we were attempting to do. can you preserve a portion of a country and develop an incipient democracy and then over time have something different come out of it. south korea versus north korea is a great example. the other thing that i think should be remembered is that there were -- of the extreme left, there were people who had revolutionary goals in this country that didn't connect with vietnam at first. the great example of that was the students for a democratic society, the sds, which was the vanguard of a lot of these more violent protests. they were formed in 1962 with the port huron statement at the university of michigan. they th
i think it was the most complicated war that the united states has ever had to fight. it's not necessarily a negative thing to say at this point, but maybe a stalemate given the strategic circumstances and the power of the anti-war movement here was an acceptable goal at a certain point, just like north korea versus south korea. just like east germany versus west germany. that's the way a lot of people, including myself, looked at what we were attempting to do. can you preserve a portion of a...
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Dec 31, 2018
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to be the first none in the united states to commit a federal felony. >> we waited for arrest, we used to the trial has an educational medium. >> we put the vietnam war and the fbi on trial. sympathize with the burning of draft cards. it's very un-american. >> i remember the comment from the prosecutor, that these people were a greater threat to the security of america than organized crime. >> the jury, i think for the most part they were all opposed to the law by the time we finish the trial. >> we have chosen to be powerless. the class in between was sent someplace else. i served in the seventh infantry division in korea. but i did follow vietnam very closely. i was young. i had wanted to serve my country and that is why i enlisted. i was identified quickly. i was in great shape, exercising, the whole nine yards. at that time i was, talking of f the war in vietnam. here's a look. [video clip] >> we had a three-hour meeting. mansfield, he was spaghetti, nothing to say, he's just against the war. saying he had nothing -- even trying to get peace and it's just spaghetti. fulbright says
to be the first none in the united states to commit a federal felony. >> we waited for arrest, we used to the trial has an educational medium. >> we put the vietnam war and the fbi on trial. sympathize with the burning of draft cards. it's very un-american. >> i remember the comment from the prosecutor, that these people were a greater threat to the security of america than organized crime. >> the jury, i think for the most part they were all opposed to the law by the...
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as i argue in my book, what we see across the united states, and across most of the developed world is women seem to max out between 16% and 18% of power positions. it's a little bit better in congress right now, but really just a very small bit. you can see this as the glass half-full. we have come a long way, but myself, i grew up really just after the second wave. i think women of my generation presumed that by the time we hit the mature parts of our careers, we really would be at something much closer to 50%. >> mona. >> i am just a tiny bit skeptical of the justice by counting metric. of course, i think if women want to be in positions of leadership and have the skills, they absolutely should be. i think there's a lot of evidence the american voter is composed is perfectly happy to vote for american women at every level of government, now. admittedly, it didn't used to be that way but it is i think today. i think there may be other reasons women are not sharing these positions 50-50. i've seen a lot of data that women are just turned off bipartisanship, that they dislike the comba
as i argue in my book, what we see across the united states, and across most of the developed world is women seem to max out between 16% and 18% of power positions. it's a little bit better in congress right now, but really just a very small bit. you can see this as the glass half-full. we have come a long way, but myself, i grew up really just after the second wave. i think women of my generation presumed that by the time we hit the mature parts of our careers, we really would be at something...
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he defeated the democrat sworn in as the 43rd president of the united states. >> i swar i will faithfully execute the office of president of the united states. >> congratulations. >> we live in a peaceful prosperous time. we can make it better. a new breeze is blowing. a world refreshed by freedom seems reborn. >> a new president faces a world in turmoil and a campaign promise. >> what he meant to say is no, new taxes for the rich. ♪ ♪ i still can't believe how incredible the screen is on the new iphone xs. and our unlimited plan really takes things to the next level with your choice of the best in tv, movies, or music. it's the perfect holiday upgrade. i know what i'm asking santa for this year. you still write letters to santa? no. please. i send him emails. can i get his email address? oh... i don't feel comfortable sharing it. get the iphone 10 s and our unlimited plan with your choice of the best in tv, movies, or music. more for your thing. that's our thing. ♪ does santa claus himself, need the most trusted battery this holiday season? maybe not. maybe he could trust any batte
he defeated the democrat sworn in as the 43rd president of the united states. >> i swar i will faithfully execute the office of president of the united states. >> congratulations. >> we live in a peaceful prosperous time. we can make it better. a new breeze is blowing. a world refreshed by freedom seems reborn. >> a new president faces a world in turmoil and a campaign promise. >> what he meant to say is no, new taxes for the rich. ♪ ♪ i still can't believe how...
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Dec 25, 2018
12/18
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i was a young united states senator. i got elected when i was 29 and had the dubious distinction of being put on the foreign relations committee. the next youngest person was 14 years older than me. i spent a lot of time traveling the world because i was assigned responsibility. my colleagues in the senate know i was chairman of the european affairs subcommittee, so i spent a lot of time with nato and in the soviet union. along came a guy a couple of years later, a guy i knew of, admired from afar. your husband, who had been a prisoner of war, who had endured and or ms. pain and suffering -- enormous pain and suffering and demonstrated the code, the mccain code. people don't think much about it today, but imagine having already known the pain you are ure and being offered the opportunity to go home and saying no. last one in, last one out. so i knew john. and john became the navy liaison officer in the united states senate. office that used to be on the basement floor of members of the military who are assigned to senato
i was a young united states senator. i got elected when i was 29 and had the dubious distinction of being put on the foreign relations committee. the next youngest person was 14 years older than me. i spent a lot of time traveling the world because i was assigned responsibility. my colleagues in the senate know i was chairman of the european affairs subcommittee, so i spent a lot of time with nato and in the soviet union. along came a guy a couple of years later, a guy i knew of, admired from...
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Dec 25, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN2
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[applause] >> and only the second not born in the united states. [applause] >> honors american letters, yes. isabel is quite aware that america extends to the arctic circle. [applause] >> she has shown is not just the universal story but has shown writers fresh ways to approach story, shown readers new ways to read stories. she has offered all of us a fresh paradigm of hope and conviction. isabel, you set a high bar for us. for those who wondered if anyone would read their work, for those of us who might have grown up dreaming in spanish, for my sisters, you showed the way, you made it possible, i could not stand here now. ♪ ♪ >> thank you. [applause] >> thank you. thank you so much. >> thank you. do we have a telephone book so that i can stand on something? thank you, thank you so much, thank you for the unexpected honor that i speak humbly on behalf of millions of people like myself who have come to this country in search of a new life. i have always been a foreigner. i was born in peru and raised in chile in my grandfather's somber house. i
[applause] >> and only the second not born in the united states. [applause] >> honors american letters, yes. isabel is quite aware that america extends to the arctic circle. [applause] >> she has shown is not just the universal story but has shown writers fresh ways to approach story, shown readers new ways to read stories. she has offered all of us a fresh paradigm of hope and conviction. isabel, you set a high bar for us. for those who wondered if anyone would read their...
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Dec 30, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN3
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is a retired captain of the united states navy. he's also a veteran astronaut of and what we and 12 are celebrating tonight, apollo 8. he's even more famous for that movie called apollo 13. ladies and gentlemen, my good friend, captain jim lovell. [applause] mr. lovell: thank you for that kind introduction. you have laid out quite a future plan for our space activities. summer of 1968. in an unpopular war in vietnam. student uprisings and the assassination of two prominent americans. the me too movement was just beginning with angry women threatening to burn their bras the street were on corners. i finished my second spaceflight 1960 six.r, i was looking forward to being involved in the apollo program. i did not pay any attention to what was happening outside nasa's gate. januaryrous fire in 1967 on the apollo 1 complex killed three friends and delayed apollo for 10 months. commitment to land on the moon by the end of the decade was in jeopardy. my next assignment was apollo 8. 1968, twofor december check out the newly developed lu
is a retired captain of the united states navy. he's also a veteran astronaut of and what we and 12 are celebrating tonight, apollo 8. he's even more famous for that movie called apollo 13. ladies and gentlemen, my good friend, captain jim lovell. [applause] mr. lovell: thank you for that kind introduction. you have laid out quite a future plan for our space activities. summer of 1968. in an unpopular war in vietnam. student uprisings and the assassination of two prominent americans. the me too...
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Dec 17, 2018
12/18
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KPIX
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>> leblanc: i have it for every transaction in the united states. >> whitaker: what's the most important thing that it has shown you? >> leblanc: that the stories that you've heard from some of the d.e.a. investigative agents concerning the large volumes of pills going into certain parts of our country are absolutely true. >> whitaker: one of those stories concerned kermit, west virginia, a town of just 400 people, where nine million opioid pills were delivered in just two years to a single pharmacy. did the companies have access to this information? >> leblanc: it was their data. that data has now been shared >> whitaker: that data has now been shared with state attorneys general, including ohio's mike dewine. >> dewine: i'm not allowed to talk about the specifics. but i will simply tell you, it's shocking. anyone who was looking at those numbers, as those middlemen were, as these distributors were, clearly, clearly should have seen that something was dramatically wrong. >> whitaker: like purdue, drug distributors declined our request for an interview, but in a statement from their trad
>> leblanc: i have it for every transaction in the united states. >> whitaker: what's the most important thing that it has shown you? >> leblanc: that the stories that you've heard from some of the d.e.a. investigative agents concerning the large volumes of pills going into certain parts of our country are absolutely true. >> whitaker: one of those stories concerned kermit, west virginia, a town of just 400 people, where nine million opioid pills were delivered in just...
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Dec 3, 2018
12/18
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KPIX
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bush, the mission was: how do we serve the united states? how do we help the united states? how do we make the united states better? which is very important in establishing a culture that can succeed. >> o'donnell: that the office was more important than the man. >> george w. bush: the office is more important than the man. it's really one of the most important things for americans to understand. dad taught me this. and, therefore, one of the jobs is to strengthen the institution of the presidency, bring honor to the office. and that, clearly, george h.w. sh did >> o'donnell: and bringing honor to the office, that institution, why is that so important? >> george w. bush: the institution of the presidency is a shock absorber. look, every president has got strengths and weaknesses, west - the country, the ballast of the ship estate, you know, is strong enough to-- withstand either tumultuous times or-- you know, the foibles of mankind. >> o'donnell: you said that watching his presidency and the criticism that he got as president helped you. >> george w. bush: yeah. yeah, it di
bush, the mission was: how do we serve the united states? how do we help the united states? how do we make the united states better? which is very important in establishing a culture that can succeed. >> o'donnell: that the office was more important than the man. >> george w. bush: the office is more important than the man. it's really one of the most important things for americans to understand. dad taught me this. and, therefore, one of the jobs is to strengthen the institution of...
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Dec 24, 2018
12/18
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KPIX
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, or m.s.s., to spy on the united states. what is m.s.s.? >> demers: so, m.s.s. is the principal intelligence agency of the chinese government. and in rough terms, it is like the c.i.a. and the f.b.i. put together. their capabilities are world- class. they have cyber capabilities, they have expertise in turning people into cooperators, and they have all of the tools and expertise of a very capable intelligence organization. >> cooper: john demers says kevin mallory hadn't worked for any u.s. intelligence agency in five years, but he was still of interest to china. he spoke mandarin, was desperate for money, and had classified information he might be willing to sell. >> demers: you're looking for people who will be willing to work with you for one reason or another. you start very slowly. you start to see what information they are willing to share with you originally. innocuous information. then, something maybe slightly more sensitive, and so forth. and that relationship develops over time. it's a patient process. >> cooper:
, or m.s.s., to spy on the united states. what is m.s.s.? >> demers: so, m.s.s. is the principal intelligence agency of the chinese government. and in rough terms, it is like the c.i.a. and the f.b.i. put together. their capabilities are world- class. they have cyber capabilities, they have expertise in turning people into cooperators, and they have all of the tools and expertise of a very capable intelligence organization. >> cooper: john demers says kevin mallory hadn't worked for...
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Dec 30, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN3
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it was expensive and costly for the united states. all of the commercial business was going overseas. in the early 2000's, the administrator started a program, cots. the idea was american companies were offered contracts to deliver cargo to the space station. we knew we would have to get cargo up to the space station. if you lose a cargo vehicle, that is not good but it is a risk we could take. we had also been building rockets to launch things into space since 1957. it is rocket science but not cutting-edge rocket science. [laughter] dr. barry: the cots program was created. we set up these milestones, breadcrumbs to allow companies to reduce risks. whos hard to find investors say i like your rocket design and here is a bazillion dollars to figure how to make it work. milestones allowed them to get there. there were two companies in the beginning. them you have not heard of because they were not able to meet the milestone process. the other company have probably heard of. spacex. this is the falcon 9 lifting off from cape canaveral. u
it was expensive and costly for the united states. all of the commercial business was going overseas. in the early 2000's, the administrator started a program, cots. the idea was american companies were offered contracts to deliver cargo to the space station. we knew we would have to get cargo up to the space station. if you lose a cargo vehicle, that is not good but it is a risk we could take. we had also been building rockets to launch things into space since 1957. it is rocket science but...
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0.0
Dec 27, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN3
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in the united states, the angle was disputatious, partisan. it was as if every party had it own cable network. not unlike the internet in many ways. lots of unsigned squibs, unsigned attacks that would be picked up and republished around the country, so i would, let's not let the narcissism of the present behind us to the fact we have been here before and part of the way we came out of it, part of the way the press actually became part of the oxygen of the republic as opposed to a stifling force was there were so many voices. i think we lament now that, oh, we had a common culture, we had a common understanding and some sort of mythic era around 1965. with all respect to people who were at work then, all the forgers, the counterculture gave us vietnam, right? it gave us, called for david to write a book about how everybody got it so wrong. so i would urge a sense of proportion and perspective about this. everybody gets up every day, whether you're the president or a citizen or a member of the media and tries to get it right and sometimes we ge
in the united states, the angle was disputatious, partisan. it was as if every party had it own cable network. not unlike the internet in many ways. lots of unsigned squibs, unsigned attacks that would be picked up and republished around the country, so i would, let's not let the narcissism of the present behind us to the fact we have been here before and part of the way we came out of it, part of the way the press actually became part of the oxygen of the republic as opposed to a stifling...
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Dec 1, 2018
12/18
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but what is the state of literacy in the united states today? >> what is it? >> the state of literacy in the united states today. >> it fluctuates, because we keep getting new people in. but i think we're getting a hold of it. i think most states now insist that children are not passed ahead without getting a passing grade. but we are working on family literacy, because we honestly mother, father, or caretaker can't read, how can they ever help their child? we are working with parents and .hildren at the same time i think we are doing good things. i would like to point out -- george says we have mission creep, because we are also in maine, maryland and florida. but we are working. >> but why literacy? of all the projects that were probably thrown at you, why literacy? because if you can't read, you can't do any of the other projects. you can't get a job, you can't feed a family, you can't pay taxes, many, many teenagers who get into trouble are there because they cannot stay up with their bodies, so they get into trouble. teenage pregnancies -- everything i ca
but what is the state of literacy in the united states today? >> what is it? >> the state of literacy in the united states today. >> it fluctuates, because we keep getting new people in. but i think we're getting a hold of it. i think most states now insist that children are not passed ahead without getting a passing grade. but we are working on family literacy, because we honestly mother, father, or caretaker can't read, how can they ever help their child? we are working with...
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Dec 1, 2018
12/18
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ALJAZ
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states that have relationships between russia and the united states the presence of mohammed bin seven months here and the whole treated man that he would receive during this summit but the only moment of peace let's say it was during a gallop it happened on friday night at the call on here when we saw president. that he was completely emotional cried when people there started singing argentine argentina is going through a very deep economic troubles with a recession very high inflation and this is definitely a historic moment for this country and we shall see how it all ends in just a few hours serious abor in buenos aires thank you very much for that now with all eyes on the g. twenty summit leaders the internet as you can imagine has already been quick to point out those awkward moments and sahra is here to tell us about some of them and what people are talking about online well there's been quite a few already so be interesting to see how we go starting with the arrival of the french president in bonn as areas where he might have had the red carpet rolled. but didn't quite receive
states that have relationships between russia and the united states the presence of mohammed bin seven months here and the whole treated man that he would receive during this summit but the only moment of peace let's say it was during a gallop it happened on friday night at the call on here when we saw president. that he was completely emotional cried when people there started singing argentine argentina is going through a very deep economic troubles with a recession very high inflation and...
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Dec 2, 2018
12/18
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ALJAZ
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states on their many trade issues then the united states will impose tariffs on two hundred billion dollars worth of chinese goods that's on top of terrorists that already apply to two hundred fifty billion dollars worth of chinese goods now the chinese foreign minister wang ye has says that he hopes there could be more exchanges and visits between the two sides just before the talks president xi jinping said he was very happy to be meeting president donald trump and the best option for china and the united states was cooperation but there remains a fundamental areas of disagreement between these two sides especially in the area of forced technology transfer and the fact that the united states says that u.s. companies that want to do business here in china have to enter into fifty fifty joint venture arrangements and then hand over their know how the united states is saying that has to stop there is one area though i think where president xi jinping is unlikely to yield and that concerns his industrial policy known as made in china twenty twenty five this is his aim to make china a
states on their many trade issues then the united states will impose tariffs on two hundred billion dollars worth of chinese goods that's on top of terrorists that already apply to two hundred fifty billion dollars worth of chinese goods now the chinese foreign minister wang ye has says that he hopes there could be more exchanges and visits between the two sides just before the talks president xi jinping said he was very happy to be meeting president donald trump and the best option for china...
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Dec 1, 2018
12/18
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ALJAZ
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hello again welcome back we're here cross united states we are watching one big snowstorm that is in the making here is going to bring some very heavy totals anywhere across the central plains there you go on saturday snow from parts of chicago all the way back here towards the rocky mountains and not only that we're going to be picking up some very heavy rain down here towards the south anywhere towards the gulf states now as we go towards sunday that storm makes its way towards the northeast and we're also bringing in québec as well as ontario with heavy snow totals as well so for new york not looking too bad in terms of temperature but up towards the north we are going to be seeing auto wet four up towards winnipeg it is going to be minus six in your forecast will make your way down here towards central america we are looking at the clouds pushing in across parts of mexico into the yucatan as well as into cuba over the next few days so the good weather that we had is going to start to deteriorate in terms of clouds but we are going to be seeing a van or most a cloud if you at thi
hello again welcome back we're here cross united states we are watching one big snowstorm that is in the making here is going to bring some very heavy totals anywhere across the central plains there you go on saturday snow from parts of chicago all the way back here towards the rocky mountains and not only that we're going to be picking up some very heavy rain down here towards the south anywhere towards the gulf states now as we go towards sunday that storm makes its way towards the northeast...
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Dec 5, 2018
12/18
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ALJAZ
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bush the forty third president of the united states. had a comment from facebook where yes inside the bush family was disastrous for many parts of the world especially the middle east interestingly we have a new opinion piece up that to zero dot com today rory miller wrote this he's a professor of government at georgetown university here in an opinion piece looking back at the bush legacy in the gulf particularly he talks about caution reliability and predictability three hallmarks of bush senior's style which he says have been eroded not only by his son but our iraq obama and general trump as well it's an interesting read a different take i will give you on george h.w. bush's legacy and it is in the opinion section at al-jazeera dot com. we're looking at a story out of denmark now which actually i have to say shocked a few of us in our editorial meeting this morning it is about a government plan to send people who have had their asylum applications rejected to a remote island off the danish coast radio in a cell like that it sounds fai
bush the forty third president of the united states. had a comment from facebook where yes inside the bush family was disastrous for many parts of the world especially the middle east interestingly we have a new opinion piece up that to zero dot com today rory miller wrote this he's a professor of government at georgetown university here in an opinion piece looking back at the bush legacy in the gulf particularly he talks about caution reliability and predictability three hallmarks of bush...
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Dec 7, 2018
12/18
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states on suspicion of violating sanctions against iran canada's prime minister says the government was warned ahead of the arrests but insists there was no political involvement china is calling for her immediate release. and the last migrant rescue ship operating off the coast of libya is ending its operations aquaria saved thousands of migrants from drowning but lost its registration last september doctors without borders the charity that runs the boat says a smear campaign by european governments has forced it to stop rescue missions. but those are the headlines this continue on al-jazeera off the witness stage of themselves but for. the first three years but difficult. especially with my family's and my mother and . it's time i called her and said you know i pray for you. when are you coming back and you know. you know when i would do up my model behave this way they have this way because you're a grandfather was the leader of this group. and so weird dude feel that we carry that weight but enough to meet the on our shoulder as descendants of leaders . thought they needed a map
states on suspicion of violating sanctions against iran canada's prime minister says the government was warned ahead of the arrests but insists there was no political involvement china is calling for her immediate release. and the last migrant rescue ship operating off the coast of libya is ending its operations aquaria saved thousands of migrants from drowning but lost its registration last september doctors without borders the charity that runs the boat says a smear campaign by european...
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Dec 8, 2018
12/18
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states or china well the united states will continue to maintain its lead because it's a country that respects rule of law and the primacy of intellectual property rights within the tax base and it has an ecosystem that fosters this kind of development and the recent years have proved that and there's no reason that's going to change given the rule of law problems that exist in china. gentlemen we have to leave it there thank you very much thanks to all our guests today they were all sterile finegold andrew young and scott lucas and thank you to you too for your company you can see the show again any time with the website al-jazeera dot com for more discussion check out our facebook page facebook dot com forward slash a.j. inside story you can also follow the conversation on twitter a.j. inside story or tweet me i'll see you back at peace and be one from need peace of the team here in doha thanks for watching so you soon bye bye. in nepal poverty leaves children vulnerable and at risk but sometimes those who say they can help cause the most harm when he's shines a light on predators i
states or china well the united states will continue to maintain its lead because it's a country that respects rule of law and the primacy of intellectual property rights within the tax base and it has an ecosystem that fosters this kind of development and the recent years have proved that and there's no reason that's going to change given the rule of law problems that exist in china. gentlemen we have to leave it there thank you very much thanks to all our guests today they were all sterile...
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Dec 17, 2018
12/18
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KGO
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president trump has promised to pull the united states out of the 2015 deal. >>> dozens of bird lovers grabbed their binoculars and cameras to take part in the 118th annual golden gate autobahn society christmas bird count. abc 7 news was in oakland as a handful of the nearly 300 members and volunteers across the bay area helped spot and count our feathered friends. >> citizens science and a personal interest for many people. it's a nice combination of the two. we're all part of the same environment. we're connected. things that affect birds are affecting us. it's really fascinating to just try to understand those connections. >> the count in san francisco takes place december 27. >>> a photographer has a question that remains unanswered for eight years. >> she took these photos of a marriage proposal. it was pure luck. her mission to find the couple caught on camera. >>> we are tracking heavy rain moving through the region tonight. we will go hour by hour, show you when the rain moves out. that full forecast right after the break. >>> here is tom with a look at what's ahead. >>> good
president trump has promised to pull the united states out of the 2015 deal. >>> dozens of bird lovers grabbed their binoculars and cameras to take part in the 118th annual golden gate autobahn society christmas bird count. abc 7 news was in oakland as a handful of the nearly 300 members and volunteers across the bay area helped spot and count our feathered friends. >> citizens science and a personal interest for many people. it's a nice combination of the two. we're all part of...
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bush and celebrate the 41st president of the united states. air force one set to transport his casket to washington, where he will lie in state on capitol hill. as we learn more about his final wishes. >>> also breaking tonight, the tornado outbreak in the midwest. more than 20 reported in 1 state alone. roughly two dozen hurt, homes damaged. rob marciano standing by. >>> plus, the nfl star now apologizing. the exclusive interview. what he says about the disturbing video of him fighting with a young woman, and the serious allegations now facing the nfl over how they handled it. >>> fire and protests. anti-government demonstrations turning violent this weekend. cars in flames. the world famous landmar
bush and celebrate the 41st president of the united states. air force one set to transport his casket to washington, where he will lie in state on capitol hill. as we learn more about his final wishes. >>> also breaking tonight, the tornado outbreak in the midwest. more than 20 reported in 1 state alone. roughly two dozen hurt, homes damaged. rob marciano standing by. >>> plus, the nfl star now apologizing. the exclusive interview. what he says about the disturbing video of...
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Dec 10, 2018
12/18
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KGO
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we are tracking the impact where in the united states and it is where thousands are without power. roads are a mess and flights are being canceled left and right. >>> we are tracking showers that will move in overnight tonight. we t wi >>> right now a potentially historic storm is hitting the southeast. this footage was shot in raleigh, north carolina, today. you see the snow on the ground. the national weather service says 12 to 20 inches of snow could fall in virginia and the carolinas by monday. already in north carolina alone, nearly half a million people are without power and troopers have responded to close to 500 crashes. more than 1,000 flights in the area have so far been canceled. >>> getting to our weather situation here. nothing quite as severe. i'm sure you are tracking it. what a disaster over there. >> it's a mess in the southeast tonight with the mix of rain and heavy snow. here locally tonight, we are tracking very light showers moving through with a cold front overnight. live doppler 7 right now, giving you the active sweep over the bay area. we are dry. you can s
we are tracking the impact where in the united states and it is where thousands are without power. roads are a mess and flights are being canceled left and right. >>> we are tracking showers that will move in overnight tonight. we t wi >>> right now a potentially historic storm is hitting the southeast. this footage was shot in raleigh, north carolina, today. you see the snow on the ground. the national weather service says 12 to 20 inches of snow could fall in virginia and...
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90
Dec 11, 2018
12/18
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KGO
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states. >> get ready for 2019, jon. >>> we're going to turn next tonight to the third new storm sweeping across the country, west to east,his one could bring several feet some snow in some places. ginger zee tracking it all for us. good evening. >> reporter: good evening, david. nearly four and a half inches of rain in 24 hours in parts of the olympics, so, this storm already torturing the pacific northwest. you could see one two three feet of snow in parts of the northern cascades, northern rockies with this storm. as it dives south by the midweek and beyond, it's mostly rain as it heads into the plains. a little wintry mix on the back side of it. all rain on that heavy snow area that fell in western north carolina, virginia, eastern tennessee. you're going to get that by friday. david? >> ginger, thank you. >>> next tonight, to the urgent search in west virginia at this hour. three people believed to be lost inside an abandoned coal mine. their distraukt families are holding around the clock vigils as rescuers travel deeper inside the mine tonight. here's abc's david kerley. >> reporte
states. >> get ready for 2019, jon. >>> we're going to turn next tonight to the third new storm sweeping across the country, west to east,his one could bring several feet some snow in some places. ginger zee tracking it all for us. good evening. >> reporter: good evening, david. nearly four and a half inches of rain in 24 hours in parts of the olympics, so, this storm already torturing the pacific northwest. you could see one two three feet of snow in parts of the northern...
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182
Dec 12, 2018
12/18
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KGO
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states. david? >> all right, get ready for 2019, jon. >>> we're going to turn next tonight to the third new storm now sweeping across the country. west to east, and this one could bring several feet of snow in some places. chief meteorologist ginger zee tracking it all for us. ginger, good evening. >> reporter: good evening, david. nearly four and a half inches of rain in just 24 hours in parts of the olympics, so, this storm already torturing the pacific northwest. we've seen wind gusts of 56 miles per hour at smith island in washington state. you could see one to three feet of snow in parts of the northern cascades, northern rockies with this storm. as it dives south, then, by the midweek and beyond, it mostly rain also it heads into the plains. a little wintry mix on the back side of it. all rain on that heavy snow area that fell in western north carolina, virginia, eastern tennessee. you're going to get that by friday. david? >> rough driving for the next several days. ginger, thank you.
states. david? >> all right, get ready for 2019, jon. >>> we're going to turn next tonight to the third new storm now sweeping across the country. west to east, and this one could bring several feet of snow in some places. chief meteorologist ginger zee tracking it all for us. ginger, good evening. >> reporter: good evening, david. nearly four and a half inches of rain in just 24 hours in parts of the olympics, so, this storm already torturing the pacific northwest. we've...
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Dec 12, 2018
12/18
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"the personal ones to me," he said, "and those involving the president of the united states." prosecutors seikoen "acted in coordination with and at the direction of individual one," aka donald trump, when he facilitated hush money payments to porn star stormy daniels and playboy playmate karen mcdougal so they wouldn't go public before the election. cohen once said he would take a bullet for his boss. >> i'm obviously very loyal and very dedicated to mr. trump. >> reporter: but cohen told the judge he has "been living in a personal and mental i i i incarcerati incarceration," ever since he went to work for trump more than a decade ago. "it was my own weakness, and a blind loyalty to this man that led me to choose a path of darkness over light," he said. "i felt it was my duty to cover up his dirty deeds." >> mr. president, did michael cohen cover up your dirty deeds? >> reporter: president trump's story about the hush payments has changed over time. first, he told the american people he knew nothing. >> did you know about the $130,000 payment to stormy o,niels? new after the
"the personal ones to me," he said, "and those involving the president of the united states." prosecutors seikoen "acted in coordination with and at the direction of individual one," aka donald trump, when he facilitated hush money payments to porn star stormy daniels and playboy playmate karen mcdougal so they wouldn't go public before the election. cohen once said he would take a bullet for his boss. >> i'm obviously very loyal and very dedicated to mr....
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Dec 13, 2018
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and the judge on fox news, and what he said about the president of the united states committing a felony. >>> the military jet crashing in the waters of honolulu. the pilot ejecting. you'll see the moment, then floating in the water. >>> the rare bear attack. the mother dragged away from her home. she is in critical condition. >>> and the human heart found on a flight over the u.s. they had to turn the plane around. >>> good evening. and it's great to have you with us here on a thursday night. several dropping stories as we come on the air. we're going to begin tonight with the dramatic takedown late today, after that deadly terror attack near a famous christmas market in france. s.w.a.t. teams just a short time where the suspect was last seen. more than 700 heavily armed officers and soldiers involved in the hunt. they used a helicopter overhead to pinpoint the suspect. then, the break. the suspect found on this street, where he opened fire. police firing back, killing him. abc's senior foreign correspondent ian pannell is on the scene tonight. >> reporter: tonight, gunfire here in stra
and the judge on fox news, and what he said about the president of the united states committing a felony. >>> the military jet crashing in the waters of honolulu. the pilot ejecting. you'll see the moment, then floating in the water. >>> the rare bear attack. the mother dragged away from her home. she is in critical condition. >>> and the human heart found on a flight over the u.s. they had to turn the plane around. >>> good evening. and it's great to have...